oh, I didn't know that! I looked at a couple of entries that you have linked to your family seed business and didn't see it there.
In a place that gets it's last frost sometimes the first week of June and it's first frost the first week of September it is a necessary consideration. They have to do a lot of growing in 90 days!

I know, eh?
It's a challenge to grow tomatoes here. Our days can get hot but the nights are always cool and damp. The last two years I have planted 8 pepper plants and gotten not one pepper. Tomatoes just start to get fruit and we get a frost. I end up bringing most of the crop indoors green to ripen on the windowsills.

My 'Stupice' tomatoes lost all their flavor when I had a few nights a row that were cool - maybe 50 or 45?

They had been pretty good before that, and I saved a few on the vine for a friend's visit. gave her one, she bit into it and spat it out it was so bad. She thought it must have gone bad, but just had no sweetness and little tartness. Kind of like oatmeal or cardboard.

The Sungold cherry tomatoes survived that cold spell and kept going for another few weeks.

threegardeners said:I know, eh?
It's a challenge to grow tomatoes here. Our days can get hot but the nights are always cool and damp. The last two years I have planted 8 pepper plants and gotten not one pepper. Tomatoes just start to get fruit and we get a frost. I end up bringing most of the crop indoors green to ripen on the windowsills.

Have you ever tried growing in those Wall O Water thingies? You could just leave it on all season.

Lee Anne, have you tried growing Early Girl tomatoes? I tried them for the first time last year, and was pleasantly surprised at how early they produced fruit and at the quantity as well. They aren't huge tomatoes, but lots of somewhat smaller tomatoes beats the heck out of no tomatoes at all! I will be growing them again this year.

Confidence is that feeling you have right before you do something really stupid.